Robert Bresson

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Robert Bresson (French International Phonetic Alphabet|IPA: [ʀɔ'bɛʀ bʀɛ'sɔ̃]) (September 25, 1901–December 18, 1999) was a French film director. Working within the medium of narrative cinema, he created a film grammar and syntax that was uniquely his own, although he had a significant influence on many others. Bresson dispensed with spectacle and drama in favor of a lean and minimalist cinematic style that points to spirituality and transcendence.

Biography

Biographical information about Bresson is incomplete and somewhat vague, as he was stingy with self-disclosure in the few interviews he permitted.


Initially a painter and photographer, Bresson made his first short film, Les affaires publiques (Public Affairs) in 1934. During World War II, he spent over a year in a prisoner-of-war camp.

In 1943, Bresson made his first feature, Les Anges du péché (Angels of Sin), with dialogue by Jean Giraudoux. His next project, Les dames du Bois de Boulogne (1945), (Ladies of the Bois de Boulogne) was based on Denis Diderot's Jacques le fataliste et son maître with dialogue by Jean Cocteau, the latter providing one of the film's immemorial lines: "There is no love there is only proof of it."

Two of Bresson's well-known films, Journal d'un curé de campagne (1951) (Diary of a Country Priest) and L'Argent (1983) (Money), exemplify the director's preference for austere staging and measured acting.

Legacy

French director Robert Bresson (1901-1999) is often referred to as a 'patron saint' of cinema, not only for the strong Catholic themes found throughout his oeuvre, but also for his notable contributions to the art of film. His original directoral language can be detected through his use of sound, associating selected sounds with images or characters; paring dramatic form to its essentials by the spare use of music; and through his infamous 'actor-model' methods of directing his almost exclusively non-professional actors.

Bresson's early artistic focus was to separate the language of cinema from the theatre, which often heavily involves the actor's performance to drive the work. With his 'actor-model' technique, Bresson's actors were required to repeat multiple takes of each scene until all semblances of 'performance' were stripped away, leaving a stark effect that registers as both subtle and raw, and one that can only be found in the cinema.

Some feel that Bresson's Catholic upbringing and Jansenist belief-system lie behind the thematic structure of most of his films. Recurring themes under this interpretation include salvation, redemption, defining and revealing the human soul, and metaphysical transcendence of a limiting and materialistic world. An example is his 1956 feature A Man Escaped, where a seemingly simple plot of a prisoner of war's escape can be read as a metaphor for the mysterious process of salvation.

Bresson's films can also be understood as critiques of French society and the wider world, with each revealing the director's sympathetic if unsentimental view on its victims. That the main characters of Bresson's most contemporary films, L'Argent (1983) and The Devil, Probably (1977), reach similarly unsettling conclusions about life indicates to some the director's feelings towards the culpability of modern society in the dissolution of individuals. Indeed, of an earlier protagonist he said, "Mouchette offers evidence of misery and cruelty. She is found everywhere: wars, concentration camps, tortures, assassinations."

In 1975, Bresson published Notes sur le Cinématographe, in which he argued that cinematography is the higher function of cinema: whereas a movie is in essence "only" filmed theatre, cinematography is an attempt to create a new language of moving images and sounds via montage.

He has influenced a number of other film-makers, including Andrei Tarkovsky, Jim Jarmusch and Paul Schrader, whose book Transcendental Style in Film: Yasujiro Ozu|Ozu, Bresson, Carl Theodor Dreyer|Dreyer (ISBN 0-306-80335-6) includes a detailed critical analysis.

Filmography (as director)

  • L'Argent (1983 film)|L'argent (1983)
  • Le diable probablement (1977) - aka The Devil, Probably
  • Lancelot du Lac (film)|Lancelot du Lac (1974) - aka Lancelot of the Lake
  • Quatre nuits d'un rêveur (1971) - aka Four Nights of a Dreamer
  • Une femme douce (1969) - aka A Gentle Woman
  • Mouchette (1967)
  • Au hasard Balthazar|Balthazar (French title : Au hasard Balthazar) (1966)
  • Procès de Jeanne d'Arc (1962) - aka The Trial of Joan of Arc
  • Pickpocket (film)|Pickpocket (1959)
  • A Man Escaped|Un condamné à mort s'est échappé ou Le vent souffle où il veut (1956) - aka A Man Escaped
  • Journal d'un curé de campagne (1951) - aka Diary of a Country Priest
  • Les dames du Bois de Boulogne (1945)
  • Les Anges du péché (1943)
  • Les affaires publiques (1934)

Bibliography

By Robert Bresson

  • Notes on the Cinematographer

About Robert Bresson

  • La politique des auteurs, edited by Andre Bazin. Interviews with Robert Bresson, Jean Renoir, Luis Buñuel, Howard Hawks, Alfred Hitchcock, Fritz Lang, Orson Welles, Michelangelo Antonioni, Carl Theodor Dreyer and Roberto Rossellini
  • Robert Bresson (Cinematheque Ontario Monographs, No. 2), edited by James Quandt
  • Transcendental Style in Film: Bresson, Ozu, Dreyer by Paul Schrader
  • Robert Bresson: A Spiritual Style in Film, by Joseph Cunneen
  • Robert Bresson, by Philippe Arnauld, Cahiers du cinema, 1986
  • The Films of Robert Bresson, Ian Cameron (ed.), New York: Praeger Publishers, 1969.
  • Robert Bresson, by Keith Reader, Manchester University Press, 2000.

External links

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